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Joe Fagan

Joe Fagan
Personal information
Full name Joseph Fagan
Date of birth (1921-03-12)12 March 1921
Place of birth Liverpool, England
Date of death 30 June 2001(2001-06-30) (aged 80)
Place of death Liverpool, England
Playing position Right half
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1937–1938 Earlestown Bohemians
1938–1951 Manchester City 158 (2)
1939–1940 Hyde United (wartime guest) 26 (0)
1951–1953 Nelson 45 (4)
1953–1954 Bradford Park Avenue 3 (0)
1954–1955 Altrincham 30 (1)
Teams managed
1951–1953 Nelson (player-manager)
1956–1958 Rochdale (assistant manager)
1958–1971 Liverpool (reserve team coach)
1971–1979 Liverpool (first team coach)
1979–1983 Liverpool (assistant manager)
1983–1985 Liverpool (manager)

* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.



* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.

Joseph "Joe" Fagan (12 March 1921 – 30 June 2001) was an English footballer and manager. He played for Manchester City in the Football League First Division as a wing half and came close to gaining international honours. As his playing career came to an end, he decided to become a coach and worked at clubs in lower leagues before getting the chance to join Liverpool in 1958.

From December 1959, he worked with Bill Shankly and Bob Paisley and was highly successful in his coaching of the club's reserve team, being mainly responsible for the development of future star players like Roger Hunt, Ian Callaghan and Tommy Smith. After Shankly retired in 1974, Fagan became assistant manager to Paisley and finally manager himself when Paisley retired in 1983. In his first season, Fagan achieved an unprecedented "treble" as Liverpool won the European Cup, the League Championship and the League Cup. He had decided to retire at the end of his second season but his final match in charge was the 1985 European Cup Final which was the scene of the Heysel Stadium disaster, an event that caused him great distress.

Fagan was an uncomplicated man who believed in the simplicity of football, a devoted family man who preferred to just get on with his job and shun the limelight. He was one of the most respected figures in the game. He and his family lived in the same house not far from Anfield throughout his Liverpool career and afterwards. He died of cancer in 2001, aged eighty.


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